PART 38 CSWIP 3.1 Noted Points - Part 2
PART 38 CSWIP 3.1 Noted Points - Part 2
PART 38 CSWIP 3.1 Noted Points - Part 2
1: Noted points –
Part 2
1) WPS:
Note:
Tests that are prescribed by most codes and standards are in the main similar.
Common tests are:
a. Plate and structural members.
b. Pipe welding.
c. Positions of welding.
d. Testing of approval test pieces.
e. Re-tests
Notes:
+ As general rule welders who qualify for certain joints on pipe need not qualify for
plate work, but qualifications on plate do not apply to pipe work.
+ The tests should be carried out without interruption but with sufficient supervision
to ensure that the requirements are being complied with. Where welder approval is
carried out in accordance with ASME section IX it states that the person supervising
the test may, if in his opinion he considers that the welder will not meet the required
standard, terminate the test at any time. If it is necessary to apply this ruling, it is
suggested that full reasons for termination be recorded. It is further recommended
that the test piece should also be kept for a short period as a means of backing up
written statement.
+ Where British standards are involved, they generally state that if the welder is of
the opinion that his first attempt may not pass any subsequent testing, he may
withhold it and weld a second. In this case it is the second test piece that is submitted
for examination and the first one must be scrapped.
3) DESTRUCTIVE TESTING
Ex:
– The reduced section tensile test normally fails in the parent metal and so it is
not
designed to give the tensile strength of the weld.
– The radius reduced tensile test is a test of the as deposited diluted weld metal.
The all weld tensile test, using a longitudinal section from the weld only, is used to
check the as deposited undiluted weld metal. (Usually used by consumable
manufacturers.)
+ Offset 0.2%:
+ Yield strength & tensile strength:
Ductile / Brittle Transition Curve:
Pls note for Carbon steel & Stainless steel: it is difference at low temperature.
+ MACRO SECTION: To examine a cross section of a weld for internal defects and
soundness.
– A transverse section of the weld is cut out. The cross section is then visually
inspected. The section is filed down from rough to smooth, then emery or wet/dry
papered down to a surface finish of 600 grit. The surface is then etched in NITAL (5%
– 10% nitric acid in alcohol), washed off, rinsed and dried. (Possibly a final clean with
acetone and mount in Bakelite.) The specimen is then inspected at up to 10-x
magnification.
for easy remember: it is divided by 2 group and identify via “unit”. Group
Quantitative have Units and Group Qualitative don’t have Units.